(Imaginary dialogues for a progressive history of the domain)

Duck: hello, Goose, where do you come from?Goose: from Arkansas, and you?Duck: Oklahoma, so we were neighbors.Goose: did you hear that there were severe storms there last week? We left just in time.Duck: yes, I'm afraid my uncles who did not want to come with us did not make it.Goose: it's the same for us, we were twenty to go there, but six of us wanted to stay longer, I do not think it was a good idea.Duck: it is always a gamble, going or staying, there's always good reasons both ways, and you never know who to listen to.Goose: ultimately, I think it always a question of available resources.Duck: do you mean we are nomads, but not free of our choices?Goose: yes, but I think it's same for everyone else, and I like big blue skies and long distances travels, like you, so that 's enough for my happiness. I do not understand why some geese have decided to become sedentary.Duck: they are probably mutant.Goose: or lazy.Duck: they will possibly lose their wings.Goose: oh, shut up, how awful!Duck: ah, ah, there will look like these big chickens I saw in pens, they do not even speak the same language as wild chickens.Goose: Duck, stop, what you are saying is not funny.Duck: well, well, do not get mad, and tell me, your crew and you, are you going to Canada?Goose: no, we stop in Northern Maine. There are large pristine lakes up there, and it's a good place to raise our children.Duck: us, we 'll go to Canada, just on the other side of the border, so we will be neighbors again.Goose: then we will perhaps meet here on the way back.Duck: it will be with pleasure, Goose.

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